A non intrusive method and system for the dynamic measurement of a distance, or the variations over time thereof, constituting the thickness, or the variations thereof, of a thin compressible dielectric material located between one or several other closely spaced solid dielectric layers of constant thickness and a conductive or semi-conductive surface. This is achieved by positioning a capacitive sensor on the external layer of the dielectric material, the sensor being composed of two parallel plates electrically insulated from one another, feeding the first plate with a high frequency signal, measuring the voltage and current value over time generated by the high frequency signal between the plate of the sensor which is closest to the surface of the outer layer of dielectric material, and deducting the above distance or variations thereof.
|
6. A method for measuring the vibrations of a stator bar of an electric generator while in use, said vibrations corresponding to a distance to be measured over a period, said stator bar acting as a grounded conductive or semi-conductive surface, said distance is an air gap between a stator-side surface of a tightening wedge of said stator bar and a rotor-side surface of said stator bar, the method comprising:
using a capacitive sensor installed on a rotor-side surface of said tightening wedge, said sensor being composed of a first conductive or semi-conductive plate, said first plate being furthest from said stator-side surface of the tightening wedged, and a second conductive or semi-conductive plate which is nearest stator-side surface of a tightening wedge and electrically insulated from the first plate, and both plates being parallel to the rotor-side surface of said stator bar;
feeding said first plate of said sensor a high frequency signal while said electric generator is in use;
measuring over time the values of the current generated by said high frequency signal between said second plate and the grounded conductive or semi-conductive surface which faces said stator-side surface of the tightening wedge;
wherein the measured current varies as an inverse function of said distance, thereby enabling the determination of said distance over a period and hence said vibrations.
5. An apparatus for measuring the vibrations of a stator bar of an electric generator while in use, said vibrations corresponding to a distance to be measured over a period, said stator bar acting as a grounded conductive or semi-conductive surface, said distance is an air gap between a stator-side surface of a tightening wedge of said stator bar and a rotor-side surface of said stator bar, the apparatus comprising:
a capacitive sensor installed on a rotor-side surface of said tightening wedge, said sensor being composed of a first conductive or semi-conductive plate, said first plate being furthest from said stator-side surface of the tightening wedge, and a second conductive or semi-conductive plate which is nearest stator-side surface of a tightening wedge and electrically insulated from the first plate, and both plates being parallel to the rotor-side surface of said stator bar;
a high frequency signal generator for feeding said first plate of said sensor a high frequency signal while said electric generator is in use;
a current detector for measuring over time the values of the current generated by said high frequency signal between said second plate and the grounded conductive or semi-conductive surface which faces said stator-side surface of the tightening wedge;
a treatment unit receiving the measured current, wherein the measured current varies as an inverse function of said distance, thereby enabling the determination of said distance over a period and hence said vibrations.
1. A method for measuring the vibrations of a stator bar of an electric generator while in use, said vibrations corresponding to a distance to be measured over a period, said electrical generator having a layer of compressible dielectric substance wherein said layer of dielectric substance is sandwiched anywhere between several parallel layers of solid and fixed dielectric substances having each a constant but not necessarily identical permittivity, said layers being closely but variably spaced from a grounded conductive or semi-conductive surface, said stator bar acting as said grounded conductive or semi-conductive surface, said distance is an air gap between a stator-side surface of a tightening wedge of said stator bar and a rotor-side surface of said stator bar, the method comprising:
using a capacitive sensor installed from the outside, and without modifying the existing arrangement of parallel dielectric layers, on a rotor-side surface of said tightening wedge which is adjacent or forms part of an external surface of the first layer of said solid dielectric substances which is furthest from the grounded conductive or semi-conductive surface, said sensor being composed of a first conductive or semi-conductive plate which is parallel to the parallel layers of dielectric substances, said first plate being furthest from said first layer, and a second parallel superimposed conductive or semi-conductive plate which is nearest said first layer and electrically insulated from the first plate, and both plates being parallel to the parallel layers of dielectric substances;
feeding said first plate of said sensor a high frequency signal;
measuring over time the values of the current generated by said high frequency signal between the second plate and the grounded conductive or semi-conductive surface which faces the dielectric layers;
wherein the measured current varies as an inverse function of the thickness of said compressible dielectric substance, thereby enabling the determination of the amplitude of the variations of thickness of said compressible dielectric substance and hence said distance.
2. The method according to
3. The method according to
4. The method according to
|
This application is a national phase entry of International Application No. PCT/CA02/00406 filed on Mar. 25, 2002 which claims priority of Canadian patent application No. 2,342,092 filed on Mar. 23, 2001, the specifications of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
Not Applicable
Not Applicable
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a non intrusive method aid system for the measurement of a distance, or the variations over time thereof, constituting the thickness or the variations thereof of a compressible dielectric material located between one or several other closely spaced solid dielectric layers of constant thickness and a conductive or semi-conductive surface, and more particularly for detecting and measuring the vibrations of the stator bars of an electrical generator or motor while said generator or motor is operating and whether said generator is a hydrogenerator or a turbogenerator.
2. Description of Related Art
The stator winding insulation system of an electric generator is exposed to harsh operating conditions. When the wedging system no longer holds the stator bars in place, vibrations set in. As stator bar retention within the slot gradually weakens, partial discharges slowly increase in intensity, and insulation is undermined. As this action progresses, side-erosion destroys the semi-conductive painting of the bar and intensifies the vibrations of the bar and the partial discharges. If such harmful vibration activity is not detected from the beginning and corrective actions are not taken, rapid insulation deterioration may lead to irreversible damages or aging so severe that repair and even partial or complete rewinding become necessary.
Several detection systems and techniques address this problem.
A method commonly employed for assessing the stator wedge tightness of a generator consists in hitting with a hammer each of the stator wedges to detect from the sound produced how tightly the wedges are held in place by the pressure of the springs attached to them. Such method has the disadvantage of requiring the generator to be stopped in most cases and the rotor to be dismantled at least partly.
More recently, U.S. Pat. No. 5,493,894 (Dailey et al.) presents a method and a system assembly by which an impact is created against the stator core lamination and a vibration sensor receives vibrations from said stator coil lamination. Such method and system require the electrical generator to be stopped and opened and the rotor completely dismantled for the temporary installation of the impact assembly and of the vibration sensor. Such method presents the disadvantages of being static, intrusive and cannot describe in a continuous manner how the wedge behaves while the generator is running.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,524,474 (Lavallee et al.) describes a method and assembly which uses a thin flat piston-mounted sensor inserted in the air-gap between the rotor and stator and positioned in front of the stator wedge to be evaluated. A variable pressure is applied to the piston of the sensor, causing a displacement of the wedge which is used to determine its tightness. This method and apparatus does not necessitate the dismantling of the rotor, but such measurement is static, while the generator is stopped, and cannot describe in a continuous manner bow the wedge behaves while the generator is running.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,675,670 (Lalonde et al.) describes a capacitive method to measure dynamically, the air-gap and its variation over time existing between the rotor and the stator of an electrical generator while the generator is running. Such method has been adapted by the licensee of said patent. VibroSystM Inc., also an assignee of the present application, to measure the vibrations of stator wedges of an electric generator by embedding capacitive sensors in stator slots, each such capacitive sensor facing a stator bar and measuring the gap between itself and the stator bar. This method, while efficient, presents the drawback of requiring the replacement of the existing wedge with a special wedge which accommodates the embedded capacitive sensor and its supporting assembly. This method is intrusive and locally modifies the existing stator configuration and installation.
Therefore, there is a need for a non intrusive and dynamic method to detect on a continuous basis the changes in tightness of the wedges of stator bars in electric generators and motors, while said generators and motors are running.
A first object of this invention is a method and a system to measure, in a non intrusive way, and from the outside, the thickness or the variations over time thereof, of a compressible dielectric material which lies between other thin and solid dielectric layers of constant thickness and a grounded conductive or semi-conductive surface.
A second object of this invention is a method and a system to measure, in a non intrusive way, and from the outside, the thickness or the variations over time thereof of a small air or gaseous gap situated between a dielectric layer of constant or known thickness and said conductive or semi-conductive surface.
A third object of this invention is to measure, in a non intrusive and dynamic way, from the outside of the stator of an electrical generator or motor, the vibrations of an air gap which results from the vibrations of the bars of said stator while the electrical generator or motor is running.
A fourth object of this invention is to detect and measure, in a non disruptive and dynamic way, the radial vibrations or displacement in time of a shaft rotating around its longitudinal axis, when the atmosphere surrounding said shaft contains liquid particles of oil or other lubricants.
A fifth object of this invention is to detect and measure, in a non intrusive and dynamic way and from the outside, the passage of a fluid or the variation of the level of a fluid in an air or gaseous gap which lies between other thin and solid dielectric layers of constant thickness and a grounded conductive or semi-conductive surface.
These and other objects of the invention may be achieved by providing a method for the non-contact measurement of the distance and of the variation over time thereof separating the surface of a grounded conductive or semi-conductive component from the nearest surface of one or several parallel layers of solid dielectric substances closely but variably spaced from said component and facing it, said variable distance being filled with a compressible dielectric substance, comprising the steps of:
positioning a capacitive sensor on the external surface of the external layer of said solid dielectric substances, said sensor being composed of a first and a second parallel superimposed conductive or semi-conductive plates electrically insulated from one another, and said plates being parallel to the parallel layers of dielectric substances;
feeding said first plate of said sensor a high frequency signal;
measuring the voltage and current values over time generated by said high frequency signal between the second plate of said sensor which is closest to the surface of said outer layer of solid dielectric substances and the facing surface of the conducting or semi-conducting component;
deducting by processing means, from the current values and variations, the values and variations over time of the distance separating the inner surface of the inner solid dielectric layer facing the surface of the conductive or semi-conductive component.
In accordance with a preferred embodiment, the compressible dielectric substance is air or gas and is situated anywhere between the parallel layers of solid dielectric substances.
In accordance with another embodiment, the method according to invention allows the measurement of the permittivity and the variations over time thereof of a dielectric substance which thickness is constant and known and closely spaced with other closely spaced dielectric layers which respective permittivities and thickness are known.
In accordance with yet another embodiment, the dielectric constants and thickness of each solid dielectric layers are known, thereby allowing not only to detect the variations of the distance over time but also the value of the distance itself at a given instant.
According to yet another embodiment, the method according to the invention allows the measurement of the vibrations of the stator bars of an electric generator wherein the capacitive sensor is affixed on the rotor-side surface of the tightening wedge of the corresponding stator bar and wherein the distance to be measured over time is the air gap between the stator-side of said wedge and the rotor-side surface of said stator bar.
According to yet another embodiment, the method according to the invention allows the measurement of the radial movements and vibrations of a shaft made of conductive or semi-conductive material and rotating in an heterogeneous and turbulent atmosphere charged with particles wherein a protective cover constituted of semi-rigid dielectric material creates a clean and variable air-gap between the capacitive sensor and the outer surface of said shaft by brushing against said outer surface.
According to still yet another embodiment, the method according to the invention allows the detection of the passage or the measurement of the change of level of a fluid in front of a capacitive sensor, said passage or change of level occurring in a space located anywhere between solid layers of dielectrics and a conductive or semi-conductive surface.
Further features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description, taken in combination with the appended drawings, in which:
With reference to the Figures, which represent the preferred embodiment, the invention is explained as follows:
Referring to
In the illustrated embodiment, ripple spring 11 consists of an elongated leaf of composite material which abuts either directly or through a length of packing material 17 and a plurality of quoins 19, respectively OD the adjacent stator bar 9 and on the stator wedges 13 which are themselves also made of composite material.
It must be understood that when wedge tightness is optimal, said ripple spring is flat, and when wedge tightness loosens, the undulations of the ripple spring increase progressively, thus letting an air gap 2 appear between wedge 13 or quoin 19 when it exists and bar 9 or packing material 17 when it exists.
It now appears clearly that if wedge tightness loosens, bars 9 will start to vibrate and such vibrations will directly make air gap 2 vibrate in the exact same manner.
If a capacitive sensor 6 is affixed on stator wedge 13 and, instead of measuring the air gap 5 as in U.S. Pat. No. 4,675,670, said sensor 6 is facing the opposite direction for measuring air gap 2, through dielectrics 13 (and quoin 19 when it exists) it has been found that the voltage output measured between the second plate of the sensor 6 which is closest to the surface of wedge 13 and the semi-conductive surface of bars 9, when capacitive sensor 6 is fed a high frequency signal, is a function of the thickness of air gap 2.
As shown in
a) capacitive sensor 6 is “facing” conductive bars 9 of the stator instead of rotor 1 and detecting the variations of air gap 2 sandwiched between said conductive bars 9 and one or several layers of solid dielectric substances, and
b) capacitive sensor 6 is detecting the change of permittivity of air gap 2 sandwiched between two or several solid dielectric layers.
As can be seen on
Calculations show and experiments confirm that the high frequency voltage signals measured between conductive bars 9 and said second plate of sensor 6 vary as an inverse function of the distance constituted by air gap 2.
Let us suppose for the purpose of simplifying the calculations that quoin 19 and packing material 17 do not exist.
Let the capacitance associated with wedge 13 be C1, and εr1 its relative permittivity; let d1 be its thickness. We have:
C1=εr1ε0S1/d1 where ε0 is the permittivity of the vacuum and S1 is the surface of the capacitance C1.
Let the capacitance of air gap 2 to be measured be C2 and εr2 its relative permittivity; let d2 be its thickness. We have:
C2=εr2ε0S2/d2 where ε0 is the permittivity of the vacuum and S2 is the surface of the capacitance C2
Total capacitance CT of the system constituted by C1 and C2 is given by the general formula: CT=C1C2/C1+C2, hence:
CT=εr1εr2ε02S1S2/(εr2ε0S2d1+εr1ε0S1d2).
If S2=S1 and since εr2=1 (air), we obtain:
CT=εr1ε0S1/(d1+εr1d2)
If d2 varies and becomes d′2, CT varies and its variation ACT becomes:
Let C0=ε0S1/d1
Then
which is a hyperbolic function of the following shape:
where a, b, C0 and k are constants and where
a=1/d1
b=1/εr1
C0=εr1ε0S1
k=C0/(1/εr1+d2/d1)
showing that the variation of measured capacitance due to the variation of the distance d′2, is an inverse function of said distance.
To confirm the validity of the claimed invention, the following series of experiments were performed:
a capacitive sensor of the commercial kind as sold by the company VibroSystM Inc. and designated by the brand name of “VM 3.12” was fixed on the outer surface of a flat dielectric plate of known thickness abutting on a parallel conductive grounded plate, and the sensor was fed by a high frequency signal of 455 Khz and a voltage of 2.94 volts (calculated r.m.s.). The resulting voltage was measured between the second plate of the sensor which is closest to the conductive plate and said conductive plate.
the conductive plate was then progressively moved away but still in parallel with the dielectric plate in incremental variations of 200μ, corresponding to air gaps varying from 0 to 1,000μ and the corresponding voltage outputs were measured.
in a first experiment, the thickness of the dielectric substance was 6.35 mm, then incrementally increased in a second experiment to 12.7 nm, then to 19.05 mm, then to 25.4 mm then to 31.75 mm.
As can be shown on
As can be shown by the arrows in Table 1 below derived from the same experiments, the air gap d′2 which can be measured directly (i.e. without the interference of dielectric plates) in the second column, can also be measured through two different dielectric plates C1 as shown on the fourth and sixth columns, and the measurement of the slope of the varying air gap d′2 which directly relates to the amplitude of its variation or vibration, remains the same, whether said air gap is measured directly or through plates which dielectric property varies. The only difference is that the air gap measurement through dielectrics is subject to a translation from the “only-air” scenario, which translation interval is given by formula (1) calculated above.
TABLE 1
##STR00001##
##STR00002##
This translation factor is important, as further tests have confirmed, because the system (sensor and signal conditioner) can then be calibrated for measuring a dielectric constituted of air alone, in such conditions that the calibrating bench includes all elements which may perturb static measurement (such as stator stacks which are then viewed as a grounded conducting surface), and then the output of the system in its real environment will be an electric signal which is already calibrated (if not saturated) for any variation of d2.
Another industrial measurement problem can be solved by the present invention: when a shaft rotates in a turbulent atmosphere charged with particles of lubricant, it becomes very difficult to detect and measure the radial movements or vibrations of said shaft, with a capacitive sensor, since the air gap charged with particles is heterogeneous and no coherent measurement pattern emerges over time when said particle-charged air gap is measured. The present invention enables to solve said problem in the following way: as can be now shown on
It is also obvious from the calculations and the experiments described previously concerning the first preferred embodiment that if the air gap in front of the capacitive sensor remains constant, but if the air is replaced by another dielectric substance such as a liquid which flows through said air gap in front of said sensor, or which level varies in front of said sensor, this movement will be detected, and if the permittivities of the various dielectric layers interposed between the sensor and the conductive or semi-conductive component are known, as well as the thickness of the air gap, then the movement of the replacing fluid as well as the instantaneous position of its level can be detected and quantified.
Not Applicable
Cloutier, Marius, Pronovost, Jean, Bissonnette, Marc
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
10247896, | Mar 26 2010 | British Telecommunications public limited company | Optical fiber apparatus |
8482302, | May 21 2008 | Rolls-Royce plc | Clearance determination device |
8587327, | Dec 28 2007 | British Telecommunications public limited company | Cable installation using induction |
8702064, | Dec 28 2007 | British Telecommunications public limited company | Cable installation using optical detection |
8720030, | Mar 31 2009 | British Telecommunications public limited company | Blown cable apparatus and method |
8775102, | Mar 19 2009 | British Telecommunications public limited company | Passive remote detection of gas flow and cable arrival |
8812254, | Feb 18 2009 | BAKER HUGHES HOLDINGS LLC | Methods and systems for monitoring stator winding vibration |
9372062, | May 04 2012 | Honeywell International Inc.; Honeywell International Inc | Techniques for calibrating a linear position sensor |
9774175, | Sep 26 2008 | British Telecommunications public limited company | Cable installation apparatus |
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
3628136, | |||
4675670, | Dec 14 1983 | Hydro Quebec | Apparatus for the dynamic and non-contact measurement of small distances |
4766389, | Sep 03 1986 | The Ex One Company | Capacitor array sensors tactile and proximity sensing and methods of use thereof |
4963829, | Mar 21 1988 | LAKE SHORE CRYOTRONICS, INC | Shaft rotation analyzer using variable capacitance transducer maintained at a constant voltage |
5295388, | Jan 30 1992 | SIEMENS ENERGY, INC | Apparatus and method for inpact testing for electric generator stator wedge tightness |
5493894, | Apr 07 1995 | SIEMENS ENERGY, INC | System and method for impact testing wedge tightness in an electrical generator |
5524474, | Nov 08 1994 | Hydro-Quebec | Method and apparatus for quantitatively evaluating the stator wedge tightness of an electric alternator |
5990807, | Apr 25 1991 | Hydro Quebec | Dynamic and non-contact measurement of displacement or of permittivity by use of a capacitive sensor |
6011294, | Apr 08 1996 | OmniVision Technologies, Inc | Low cost CCD packaging |
6075464, | Jul 18 1991 | Hydro Quebec | Dynamic and non-contact measurement of displacement or of permittivity by use of a capacitive sensor |
Executed on | Assignor | Assignee | Conveyance | Frame | Reel | Doc |
Mar 25 2002 | Vibrosystm Inc. | (assignment on the face of the patent) | / | |||
Nov 18 2003 | BISSONNETTE, MARC | VIBROSYSTM INC | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 015128 | /0123 | |
Nov 18 2003 | PRONOVOST, JEAN | VIBROSYSTM INC | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 015128 | /0123 | |
Nov 18 2003 | CLOUTIER, MARIUS | VIBROSYSTM INC | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 015128 | /0123 |
Date | Maintenance Fee Events |
Dec 08 2009 | M2551: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 4th Yr, Small Entity. |
Dec 16 2013 | M2552: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 8th Yr, Small Entity. |
Dec 06 2017 | M2553: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 12th Yr, Small Entity. |
Date | Maintenance Schedule |
Jun 20 2009 | 4 years fee payment window open |
Dec 20 2009 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Jun 20 2010 | patent expiry (for year 4) |
Jun 20 2012 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 4) |
Jun 20 2013 | 8 years fee payment window open |
Dec 20 2013 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Jun 20 2014 | patent expiry (for year 8) |
Jun 20 2016 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 8) |
Jun 20 2017 | 12 years fee payment window open |
Dec 20 2017 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Jun 20 2018 | patent expiry (for year 12) |
Jun 20 2020 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 12) |